The car is RWD and by heavy braking and a sharp turn, he unloaded the rear suspension and induced oversteer which caused him to crash into the car. He was actually out of control as soon as he started to merge into the right lane, and the snap back of the rear regaining traction is what swerved him into the other car.

It actually happens all the time, large radioactive elements spontaneously decay because the probability distribution of some of the particles in the nucleus exist slightly outside the barrier imposed by the strong nuclear force, and they tunnel through. Also, the atoms dont really jump, they exist as a probability distribution, and are usually observed to be at the position where the probability is highest.

Quantum tunneling is both mathematically proven, and also proven in laboratory experiments. It's also why large elements decay, because the wave state of the particles in the nucleus can tunnel out of the barrier imposed by the strong nuclear force.

I think what you're thinking of is quantum tunneling where the wave state of a particle can exist beyond the well it is confined within, meaning there's a small probability it can "tunnel" out of a seemingly impervious container.

I don't think I'm really qualified to answer this question, as I've only ever used this scope for astrophotography. That being said, I absolutely love this telescope, and it's very rugged. When I was shipping my telescope back to CO from NY I had built a solid hardwood box for it, suspended the scope inside and everything, so it wasn't touching the walls. Three weeks later, I got my telescope in the mail, box nowhere to be seen, and everything that was in the wood box hastily thrown into a cardboard box, with no lens cover on my telescope, and the objective lens housing knocked off of its threads. It took me a little while to get everything put back together (also the counterweight arm was missing), but once I did, the telescope worked perfectly, and now only has a small dent in the side as a reminder not to ship anything valuable with UPS :)

Haha I'm sure that's true, I myself had been waiting for the clouds to part ever since Christmas since I got a polar alignment scope, but as is the case with any new telescope part, the skies are guaranteed to be cloudy as soon as you get it.

This is actually true color, as I use an unmodified Canon T1i. However, looking at this through my telescope, you definitely don't see any color, and it kind of looks like a black and white haze around the stars.

It's supposed to be a recurve, it's not backwards, that's just how it looks when it has no tension on it. Which is another mistake in the tattoo, because its definitely supposed to be fully drawn haha.